ke Poppy See Cakes
Maud-Miska PETeHSMAM
T.P.S.C.
UP TO lO
GR. I-4
$3.25
The POPPY SEED
CAKES By
MARGERY CLARK
> Auntie Katushka in her bright ymawl, Andrewshek and Erminka, ; not to speak of poppy seed cakes,
1 goat, goose, swan, chickens, dog, cat, red-topped boots and the rest bring the right combination for nursery tales—little children and nursery adventures, presented with imagination and novelty.
The Petershams have used gay color and humor to bring out the amusing situations in the stories. An ideal nursery book.
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AUNTIE KATUSHKA BROUGHT A HUGE BAG FILLED WITH FRESENTS
COPYRIGHT, 1924, BY
DOUBLEDAY & COMPANY, INC.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES
THE POPPY SEED CAKES
NCE upon a time there was a
little boy and his name was
Andrewshek. His mother and his father
brought him from the old country when
he was a tiny baby.
Andrewshek had an Auntie Katush-
ka and she came from the old country,
too, on Andrewshek’s fourth birthday.
Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka
came on a large boat. She brought
with her a huge bag filled with presents
for Andrewshek and his father and his
mother. In the huge bag were a line
feather bed and a bright shawl and live
pounds of poppy seeds.
9
The line feather bed was made from
the feathers of her old green goose at
home. It was to keep Andrewshek
warm when he took a nap.
The bright shawl was for Andrew-
shek’s Auntie Katushka to wear when
AUNTIE KATUSHKA STARTING HOME FROM THE MARKET
she went to market.
The five pounds of poppy seeds were
to sprinkle on little cakes which Andrew-
shek’s Auntie Katushka made every
Saturday for Andrewshek.
One lovely Saturday morning An-
drewshek’s Auntie Katushka took some
butter and some sugar and some flour
and some milk and seven eggs and she
rolled out some nice little cakes. Then
she sprinkled each cake with some of the
poppy seeds which she had brought from
the old country.
While the nice little cakes were bak¬
ing, she spread out the fine feather bed
on top of the big bed, for Andrewshek
to take his nap. Andrewshek did not
like to take a nap.
MAUD-MlSKA
PETtHSMAM
SHE SPRINKLED EACH CAKE WITH POPPY SEEDS
Andrewshek loved to bounce up and
down and up and down on his fine
feather bed.
Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka took
the nice little cakes out of the oven and
put them on the table to cool; then she
put on her bright shawl to go to market.
“Andrewshek,55 she said, “please watch
these cakes while you rest on your fine
feather bed. Be sure that the kitten and
the dog do not go near them.”
“Yes, indeed! I will watch the nice
little cakes,” said Andrewshek. “And I
will be sure that the kitten and the dog
do not touch them.” But all Andrew¬
shek really did was to bounce up and
down and up and down on the fine
feather bed.
i
“Andrewshek!” said Andrewshek’s
Auntie Katushka, “how can you watch
the poppy seed cakes when all you do is
to bounce up and down and up and
down on the fine feather bed?” Then
Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka, in her
bright shawl, hurried off to market.
But Andrewshek kept bouncing up
and down and up and down on the fine
feather bed and paid no attention to the
little cakes sprinkled with poppy seeds.
Just as Andrewshek was bouncing
up in the air for the ninth time, he heard
a queer noise that sounded like “Hs-s-s-
s-sss,” at the front door of his house.
“Oh, what a queer noise!” cried
Andrewshek. He jumped down off the
fine feather bed and opened the front
BOUNCING UP IN THE AIR FOR THE NINTH TIME
door. There stood a great green goose
as big as Andrewshek himself. The
goose was very cross and was scolding
as fast as he could. He was wagging
his head and was opening and closing
his long red beak.
“What do you want?” said Andrew¬
shek. “What are you scolding about?”
“I want all the goose feathers from
>
your fine feather bed,” quacked the big
green goose. “They are mine.”
“They are not yours,” said Andrew-
shek. “My Auntie Katushka brought
them with her from the old country in
a huge bag.”
“They are mine,” quacked the big
green goose. He waddled over to the
fine feather bed and tugged at it with
< his long red beak.
“Stop, Green Goose!” said Andrew-
shek, “and I will give you one of Auntie
Katushka’s poppy seed cakes.”
“A poppy seed cake!” the green
goose quacked in delight. “I love nice
little poppy seed cakes! Give me one
and you shall have your feather bed.”
But one poppy seed cake could not
THE GREEN GOOSE TUGGED AT THE FINE FEATHER BED
satisfy the greedy green goose.
“Give me another!” Andrewshek
gave the green goose another poppy seed
cake.
“Give me another!” the big green
goose hissed and frightened Andrewshek
nearly out of his wits.
Andrewshek gave him another and
and another and another till a)l the poppy
seed cakes were gone.
Just as the last poppy seed cake dis¬
appeared down the long neck of the
green goose, Andrewshek’s Auntie Ka-
tushka appeared at the door, in her
bright shawl. “Boo! hoo!” cried An-
drewshek. “See! that naughty green
goose has eaten all the poppy seed cakes.”
“What? All my nice little poppy
seed cakes?” cried Andrewshe’s Auntie
Katushka. “The naughty goose!”
The greedy goose tugged at the fine
feather bed again with his long red
beak and started to drag it to the door.
Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka ran after
the green goose and just then there was
a dreadful explosion. The greedy goose
who had stuffed himself with poppy seed
cakes had burst and his feathers flew all
over the room.
“Well! well!75 said Andrewshek’s
Auntie Katushka, as she gathered up the
pieces of the big green goose. “We
soon shall have two fine feather pillows
for your fine feather bed.”
THE WHITE GOAT
NE fine Saturday morning An-
drewshek’s Auntie Katushka
said, “Andrewshek, I must go to market
and buy a goat.”
Andrewshek was playing in the gar¬
den. He had pulled out some of the
feathers from his fine feather bed and
had put them in his hair. He looked
very funny.
As Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka
went out of the gate to go to market,
Andrewshek said, “May I go with you,
Auntie Katushka?”
“No, Andrewshek!” said his Auntie
Katushka. “You must stay at home.
Please watch to see that the dog does not
open the gate and let the chickens and
the cat run out into the road.”
“Yes, indeed, I will watch to see that
the dog does not open the gate. And I
will be sure that the chickens and the
cat do not run out into the road.”
Then Auntie Katushka, in her bright
shawl, hurried off to market. But all
Andrewshek really did was to swing
backward and forward and backward and
forward on the dark green gate.
Andrewshek loved to swing back¬
ward and forward on the gate just as much
as he loved to bounce up and down on
his fine feather bed.
ALL ANDREWSHEK DID WAS TO SWING BACKWARD AND FORWARD AND BACKWARD AND FORWARD
At the market Auntie Katushka saw
a white goat. The white goat had a
long beard and a short tail. “That is
just the goat I want!” said Auntie Ka¬
tushka.
“White Goat!” said Auntie Katush¬
ka. “I am going to take you home with
me to Andrewshek.”
“Who is Andrewshek?” said the goat.
“Andrewshek is a little boy who lives
across the tracks and up the hill, in a
little house with a dark green gate.
Andrewshek loves to swing backward
and forward and backward and forward
on the dark green gate.”
“I would not be surprised if Andrew¬
shek was swinging backward and for¬
ward on the green gate now,” said the
goat to herself. “I think I’ll run ahead
and see.”
She galloped off.
“Stop, White Goat!” cried Auntie
Katushka. “Stop!”
But the goat did not stop. She ran
faster and faster, across the tracks and up
the hill until she came to the little house
with the dark green gate. Andrew-
shek was swinging backward and forward
and backward and forward on the dark
green gate. The chickens and the cat
had long before run out into the road.
“How do you do, Andrewshek?’1
said the white goat.
“How do you do, White Goat?”
said Andrewshek. “Where are you go¬
ing?”
“HOW DO YOU DO, ANDREWSHEK?”
“No further!” said the white goat.
“I belong to your Auntie Katushka.”
“Where is my Auntie Katushka?”
said Andrewshek.
“I ran away from her, across the
tracks and up the hill; and here I am!”
said the goat.
“Won’t Auntie Katushka be sur¬
prised when she sees you here!” said
Andrewshek.
“I think I will hide!” said the white
goat. She ran behind the little house.
Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka, in
her bright shawl, came hurrying up the
hill.
“Andrewshek, I bought a sweet white
goat at the market, to give us milk for
our poppy seed cakes. She ran away
and so we cannot have any poppy seed
cakes to-day. I wonder how we can
find her!”
“Ha! ha! ha!” the sweet white goat
called out. She had climbed to the top
of the roof where she could look down
on Andrewshek and Auntie Katushka.
“Come down from the roof, you
naughty White Goat!” said Auntie Ka¬
tushka.
The goac shook her head.
“Please come down!” said Andrew-
shek. “And I will give you a big poppy
seed cake.”
“I do not like poppy seed cakes,”
said the naughty white goat.
“What shall we do?” said Andrew-
shek.
Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka
"I DO NOT LIKE POPPY SEED CAKES,” SAID THE NAUGHTY WHITE GOAT
went into the house and took off her
bright shawl. She put on her apron.
She washed some turnips and some
parsnips, two onions and four carrots for
the soup. Then she cut the green tops
from the vegetables. She put the green
tops in a basket. “Goats love fresh
green tops,” she said to Andrewshek, as
she put the basket on the back porch by
the door. She left the door wide open.
The naughty white goat was peep¬
ing over the roof to see what she could
see. She saw the green tops in the
basket by the kitchen door. Immedi- J
ately she felt very hungry. She clam¬
bered down from the roof. She stole up
to the basket.
“Well! well!” laughed Andrewshek’s
Auntie Katushka, as she slipped a halter
around the white goat’s neck. “We
soon shall have plenty of milk for our
poppy seed cakes.”
THE PICNIC BASKET
JNE cool summer morning An-
drewshek’s Auntie Katushka
said, “Andrewshek, I think I will put
some sandwiches and some cottage
cheese and some poppy seed cakes and
two eggs in our picnic basket. Then
we will go to the park and eat our lunch
there, near the water.”
“May I go with you, Auntie Katush-
ka?” said Andrewshek.
“Of course you may go to the park
with me,” said Auntie Katushka. “But
first we have a great many things to do,
before we can start to the park. I must
go into the garden and catch the white
goat. I will tie her up so she will not
run away. Please find the kitten, An-
drewshek, and put her in the cellar, so
she will not worry the chickens while
we are gone.”
“Yes, indeed, I will find the kitten
and put her in the cellar,” said Andrew-
shek, “so she will not worry the chickens
while we are gone.”
But all Andrewshek really did was
to lift up the red and white napkin which
Auntie Katushka had laid over the pic¬
nic basket and look at the eggs and the
poppy seed cakes and touch the sand¬
wiches and taste the cottage cheese.
The goat was not easy to catch. The
THE GOAT WAS NOT EASY TO CATCH
goat wanted to go to the park, too. She
galloped round and round the garden.
At last Auntie Katushka caught her
and tied her firmly to a post.
Then Auntie Katushka went into
the house to get Andrewshek and the
lunch basket. She saw Andrewshek
peeping under the red and white napkin
and tasting the cottage cheese. He had
forgotten all about the kitten.
The kitten was nowhere to be found.
“I think she must be paying a visit to the
Mouse family,” said Auntie Katushka.
Then Auntie Katushka put on her
bright shawl and took her umbrella with
the long crooked handle under one arm.
Then she picked up the lunch basket
with the red and white napkin on top and
she and Andrewshek started for the
park.
They went down the hill and across
the tracks and past the market and down
a long street until they came to the park
by the water.
Andrewshek sat down on the grass
beside a little stream. Andrewshek’s
Auntie Katushka laid her umbrella with
ANDREWSHEK SAT DOWN ON THE GRASS
/
the long crooked handle and the basket
of lunch on the grass beside Andrew-
shek.
“Andrewshek,” said Auntie Katush-
ka, “I must go to the spring and get
some water for us to drink. Please
watch the basket with the eggs and the
sandwiches and poppy seed cakes and
cottage cheese while I am gone.”
“Yes, indeed, I will watch the basket
of lunch,” said Andrewshek.
But what Andrewshek really did was
to say to himself, “I would like to take
off my shoes and my stockings and wade
in the little stream. I believe I will!”
Andrewshek took off his shoes and
his stockings and went wading in the
little stream.
A big white swan came floating
calmly down the stream. He saw the
picnic basket lying on the grass. He
stopped and stretched and stretched his
long neck, till he could touch the basket.
“Honk! honk! honk!” said he. “I won¬
der what is under the red and white
napkin.”
The big white swan lifted the napkin
with his red bill and looked in the basket.
“Oh, oh, oh! Won’t Mother Swan be
pleased with this nice lunch!” said he.
“Sandwich bread makes fine food for
baby swans.”
He picked up the basket in his strong
red bill and floated it ahead of him down
the stream.
Andrewshek could not wade after
ANDREWSHEK COULD NOT WADE AFTER THE BIG WHITE SWAN
the big white swan. The water was too
deep.
“Stop! stop! White Swan!” cried
Andrewshek. “That is my Auntie Ka-
tushka’s picnic basket and it has our
lunch in it. Please put it back on the
grass.”
“No, indeed! I will not put the
basket back,” honked the big white
swan. “Sandwich bread makes fine food
for baby swans and I have ten baby swans
to feed.”
The big white swan gave the picnic
basket a little push with his red bill.
The basket floated on down the little
stream. The big white swan floated
calmly behind it.
Just then Andrewshek’s Auntie Ka-
tushka came hurrying up with the spring
water. She saw the big white swan float¬
ing down the stream, with the lunch
basket floating ahead of him.
Andrewshek stood in the middle of
the stream, crying.
Auntie Katushka picked up her um¬
brella with the long crooked handle.
Auntie Katushka ran along the shore
until she overtook the big white swan3
with the lunch basket floating ahead of
him.
She caught the handle of the picnic
basket in the crook of her long handled
umbrella. She drew the basket safely
to shore.
“Well! well!” said Auntie Katush-
ka, as she spread the red and white nap-
kin on the grass, and laid the sandwiches
and the poppy seed cakes and the cot¬
tage cheese and the eggs upon it. “It
always pays to carry an umbrella to a
picnic.”
umm
mnn
Hin
mii ERMINKA AND THE RED
TOPPED BOOTS
NCE upon a time there was a lit¬
tle girl and her name was Er-
minka. When Erminka was exactly
four and one half years old, her Uncle
Anton came to her house from the old
country. Erminka’s brother was one *
year and two days younger than Erminka
and much smaller.
Erminka’s Uncle Anton brought a
set of wooden dolls for Erminka from the
old country. Erminka liked the wooden
dolls, although she did not like most
dolls very much. The dolls’ blue dresses
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were painted on; the dolls’ pink arms
were painted on; the dolls’ red shoes
were painted on.
Uncle Anton brought Erminka’s
brother a pair of red topped boots.
Uncle Anton had bought the red topped
boots from a shoemaker in the old coun¬
try. “I will take a large pair of red
topped boots,” he said to the shoemaker.
ERMINKA LIKED THE WOODEN DOLLS
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“It is better to have the boots too large
than too small. If they do not fit now,
they will in a year. Little boys grow
very fast.”
The red topped boots were too big.
“You will have to wait at least a year
before you are large enough to wear
them,” Erminka’s mother said.
“Oh, then the red topped boots will IHH
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be just right for me!” cried Erminka,
afor I am just a year and two days older!
May I wear them?5
The red topped boots were too big
for Erminka.
“I can wear three pairs of thick stock¬
ings with the red topped boots, Mother,”
she said, “and then they will fit me,”
Hill H
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1 Hill
In the morning Erminka did not
bother to find three pairs of thick winter
stockings. She put on her thin white
socks and slipped the boots on over
them quickly.
After breakfast Erminka’s mother
went into the garden at the back of their
house to pick butter beans and tomatoes.
Erminka went along to carry the basket.
She wore the red topped boots.
“I must show my red topped boots
to those tomato plants at the end of the
garden,” Erminka said to her mother.
“The red tomatoes and the red tops on
my boots are just the same color.”
She ran down the path in a great
hurry.
“See!” she called to the tomato
“MY RED-TOPPED BOOTS AND YOUR RED TOMATOES ARE THE SAME COLOR”
plants. “My red topped boots and your
red tomatoes are the same color! Aren’t
they beautiful?”
Just then Erminka and her red
topped boots slipped. Erminka found
herself flat upon her back and flat upon
her favorite cucumber vine.
“Oh dear! oh dear! you have crushed
a cucumber, Erminka!” cried the tomato
ERMINKA HAD DONE MORE THAN CRUSH ONE CUCUMBER
plants. uOh dear! oh dear!”
But Erminka had done more than
crush one cucumber. She had sat upon
ten cucumbers and two juicy red to¬
matoes and one little bean vine and two
fat summer squashes.
In the evening after supper Erminka’s
mother said to Erminka’s father, “What
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do you think Erminka did to-day in the
garden?”
“I do not know,” said Erminka’s
father as he puffed on his long pipe.
“Had it something to do with the red
topped boots?”
“Yes!” said Erminka and her mother
at the same time. “How did you guess
so quickly?”
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ERMINKA AND THE
CRATE OF CHICKENS
RMINKA, I need eighteen duck
eggs. I think I shall go to market
for them,” said Erminka’s mother.
“May I go with you? May I carry
the little basket? And may I carry some
eggs? And oh, Mother!” said Erminka,
“may I wear the red topped boots?”
“Will you be very careful, Erminka,
and not upset anything to-day, if you
wear the red topped boots?”
“I will be careful, Mother, if I may
wear my red topped boots,” said Er-
minka. “I look so beautiful in my nice
red topped boots.”
“Your brother’s red topped boots,”
reminded Erminka’s mother.
“Well, Erminka,” said Erminka’s
mother, as she locked the kitchen door.
“I am ready to go to market now. I
think I will buy some gooseberries, too.
Then we can have gooseberry tarts,”
“May I make some tarts, too, and
have a tea-party?” Erminka asked.
“Yes, indeed!” said her mother.
Erminka and her mother started for
the market. They went down a hill
and across the tracks and up two blocks
until they came to a big red shed.
ERMINKA AND HER MOTHER STARTED FOR THE MARKET
It was the market. Inside, the
farmers and the farmers’ wives were sell¬
ing vegetables and fruit and chickens and
flowers and one farmer had five little
white pigs for sale.
Erminka’s mother saw many friends
among the farmers’ wives.
“How do you do, Mrs. Smith?” she
would say. “Have you any sweet
butter this morning?”
“How do you do, Mrs. Gray? Have
you any nice fresh buttermilk?”
“Good morning, Mrs. Popolovski!
Have you any nice little cabbages to¬
day?”
Erminka grew tired of visiting with
all these friends. She wandered off by
herself.
She saw a crate full of chickens. aYou
nice chickens!” she said. “Wouldn’t
you like to see my red topped boots?”
“Yes, indeed!” said the chickens.
Erminka opened the door of the
crate with the toe of her red topped boot.
As soon as the crate was open, five
white chickens flew past Erminka. The
market was upset. Everyone stopped
FIVE WHITE CHICKENS FLEW PAST ERMINKA
buying apples and selling eggs and ran
after the chickens.
The chickens flew wildly about the
market in all directions. One chicken
fluttered out of the front door of the
market and down the street. Only a 0
baby chicken was left in the crate.
The market master and the farmers
caught the chickens and put them back
in the crate.
“I did not mean to let the chickens
run away, Mother,” said Erminka. C£But
it looked so easy to open the door of the
crate with the toe of my red topped
boot.”
“Your brother’s red topped boot,”
reminded Erminka’s mother.
In the evening after supper Erminka’s
mother said to Erminka’s father, “what
do you think Erminka did to-day at the
market?”
“I do not know,” said Erminka’s
father, as he puffed on his long pipe.
“Had it something to do with the red
topped boots?”
“Yes!” said Erminka and her mother
at the same time. “How did you guess
so quickly?”
“HAD IT SOMETHING TO DO WITH THE RED-TOPPED BOOTS?”
ERMINKA AND THE
DUCK POND
THINK we shall have to go to the
shoestore and buy Erminka a pair
of pretty black slippers,” said Erminka’s
mother. “Perhaps then she will not
go poking her toes into places where
they do not belong.”
“That is a fine idea,” said Erminka’s
father.
The next afternoon Erminka and her
mother set off for the shoestore to look
for a pair of pretty black slippers. On
the way they stopped to pay a visit.
The house of Erminka’s mother’s
friend was in a garden full of fruit trees
and sweet smelling flowers.
“Let us go and sit in the garden,”
said Erminka’s mother’s friend.
They went into the garden and sat
down on a white bench under an apple
tree. Soon they began to talk very fast
about friends in the old country.
Erminka grew tired of visiting. She
ran down to the end of the garden to see
the ducks.
Four brown ducks with yellow bills
and one large white duck were swim¬
ming in a little duck pond at the end of
the garden. The ducks swam lazily
around and around, until they saw Er¬
minka and her red topped boots.
FOUR BROWN DUCKS WITH YELLOW BILLS AND ONE LARGE WHITE DUCK WERE SWIMMING
“Would you like to see my red top¬
ped boots?” called Erminka.
The ducks came up to the shore.
They pecked at Erminka’s boots with
their long bills. One big duck came up
on the shore beside Erminka.
Erminka was afraid of ducks when
they came so close and pecked. Er¬
minka took three steps backward, away
from the duck pond.
The edge of the duck pond was very
muddy. Erminka slipped. She sat
down with a bump in the soft mud. The
little ducks paddled away to the other
end of the little pond when they heard
the splash. The muddy water splattered
on the white feathers of the big duck.
He waddled back to the pond. He was
THE MUDDY WATER SPLATTERED ON THE WHITE FEATHERS OF THE BIG DUCK
very angry.
Erminka’s red topped boots were
drenched with mud.
In the evening after supper Er-
minka’s mother said to Erminka’s father,
“What do you think Erminka did to¬
day?”
“I think I can guess,” said Erminka’s
father, as he puffed on his long pipe. “I
guess that Erminka bought a pair of
pretty black slippers.”
“No, indeed!” said Erminka and her
mother at the same time.
Erminka went to the cupboard and
brought out the sad-looking red topped
boots.
“I fell in the duck pond,” she said.
“Never mind, Erminka!” said Er-
minka’s father. “Next week I am going
back to the old country for one month.
I will go to the shoemaker and buy an¬
other pair of red topped boots that will
be just your size.”
1 [ C
THE SHOEMAKER IN THE OLD COUNTRY
THROUGH THE FENCE
K RMINKA and her mother and her
little brother went to live at Er-
minka’s uncle’s house, while Erminka’s
father was in the old country. Ermin-
ON THE WAY TO THE UNCLE’S HOUSE
ka’s uncle lived across the tracks and
up a hill, in a yellow house with a dark
red roof and a little garden. The house
was next door to the little green house
where Andrewshek lived. There was a
high fence between the two gardens.
Erminka’s uncle was a carpenter.
He had made Erminka three little chairs
and a little table and painted them a nice
r i
*
bright blue.
One warm summer afternoon Er-
minka took her three little blue chairs
and her little blue table out into the gar¬
den.
“Now we will play tea-party,” she
said to her little brother.
Erminka’s little brother was such a
tiny boy that he did not play tea-party in
4
*
«
I «
t «
ERMINKA’S LITTLE BROTHER
the way Erminka wanted.
Erminka saw Andrewshek next door,
playing in his garden.
“Please come over and play tea-party
with my little brother and me!” Erminka
called to Andrewshek.
“How can I get over into your yard?
My Auntie Katushka has tied the gate
tight shut. I used to swing on the gate
so much that the kitten and the chickens
would run out into the road.”
“Here is a nice little hole in the
fence,” said Erminka. “Perhaps we can
make the hole bigger, so you can crawl
through.”
Erminka and her little brother and
Andrewshek all tugged at a board and
shook it and pulled it as hard as they
could.
After a long time Andrewshek was
able to crawl through the hole. An¬
drewshek sat down in the third little blue
chair.
“Will you have a cup of tea, An¬
drewshek?” asked Erminka.
“Yes, thank you; I will have a cup
of tea,” said Andrewshek.
4
“YES. THANK YOU; I WILL HAVE A CUP OF TEA,” SAID ANDREWSHEK
“Yes, thank you; I will have a cup
of tea, too,” said a voice behind Erminka.
It was the white goat. She had
poked her way through the hole in the
fence.
“Yes, thank you; I will have a cup of
tea and some cakes, too,” said a voice
behind Andrewshek.
It was the dog. He had crawled
IT WAS THE WHITE GOAT
through the hole in the fence.
“Yes, thank you; we will have two
cups of tea and some cakes, too,” said
two voices behind Erminka’s little
brother.
Two of Auntie Katushka’s chickens
had fluttered through the fence.
“Dear! dear! what shall we do?” said
Erminka to Andrewshek. “We have
I fi
k
no more cups and no chairs for them to
sit upon.”
“We could sit on the table,” said the
white goat politely.
“But then there would be no room
for the dishes and the cakes!” said Er-
minka.
“I think I will be going home then,”
said the white goat.
A
XX
XX
XX
XX
XX
XX
X-X
XX
XX
N
s &
e t
I
“I think I will be going home then,”
said the dog.
“We think we will be going home
then,” said the chickens.
“I think I will be going home, too,”
said Andrewshek.
The white goat poked her way
through the hole in the fence. The
dog crawled through, the opening and
!
3 b
3
H H H hi b b
4
! the two chickens fluttered through after
him.
Then Andrewshek crept through
the fence.
Auntie Katushka was on the other
side.
“What shall I do with a runaway
goat, Andrewshek?” asked Auntie Ka¬
tushka.
b b b b h
b b b
b b b b b h b h b
y
AUNTIE KATUSHKA WAS ON THE OTHER SIDE
r »
>
i H M IH
M H •
M H H H
£tI would put him to bed,” said An-
drewshek.
“What shall I do with a runaway *
dog, Andrewshek?” asked Auntie Ka-
tushka.
££Put him straight to bed,” said An¬
drewshek.
££What shall I do with two runaway
chickens, Andrewshek?” asked Andrew-
!
i £
shek’s Auntie Katushka.
££Put them straight to bed,” said An-
drewshek.
££And what shall I do with a runaway
little boy?” asked Auntie Katushka.
££I don’t know,” said Andrewshek.
“I do,” said Auntie Katushka.
Then Andrewshek’s Auntie Katush¬
ka picked Andrewshek up in her arms
h b b b b
b b
b * x b
* H b b H b
*
and carried him in to his fine feather
TO HIS FINE FEATHER BED
THE TEA PARTY
HE next morning Andrewshek’s
Auntie Katushka said to An-
drewshek, “I think I will make some
poppy seed cakes.”
Then she took some butter and some
sugar and some dour and some milk and
nine eggs and rolled out some nice little
cakes.
“Why are you making so many nice
little poppy seed cakes?” asked Andrew-
shek.
“Because we are going to have a tea-
party this afternoon,” said Auntie Ka-
tushka. She sprinkled each little cake
with some of the poppy seeds she had
brought from the old country.
“Who is coming to the tea-party?”
asked Andrewshek, as he watched his
Auntie Katushka put the poppy seed
cakes in the oven.
“Erminka and Erminka’s mother
and Erminka’s little brother,” said
Auntie Katushka.
“Oh, goody!” said Andrewshek.
“And I hope Erminka brings her wood¬
en dolls.”
Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka took
off her kitchen apron and hung it on a
nail beside the door. She took the nice
little cakes out of the oven and put them
SHE TOOK THE NICE LITTLE CAKES OUT OF THE OVEN
on the table to cool. Then she went to
the cupboard drawer and took out her
very best silk apron and the bright shawl
which she had brought from the old
country. She laid the apron and the
shawl on the fine feather bed.
“When it is time for the tea-party, I
will put these on,” said Auntie Katushka
to Andrewshek. “Now I am going next
I
l
i & k k fc L
door to invite Erminka and Erminka’s
mother and Erminka’s little brother to
the tea-party. Please watch the kitchen
door while I am gone. Be sure that the
kitten and the dog and the chickens do
not come into the house.”
“Yes, indeed! I will watch the
kitchen door while you are gone next
door,” said Andrewshek. “And I will
1 M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M
be sure that the kitten and the dog and
the chickens do not come into the
house.”
But all Andrewshek really did was to
put on Auntie Katushka’s very best silk
apron and her bright shawl and walk
back and forth and back and forth in
front of the mirror. He paid no atten¬
tion to the kitchen door.
K
| I;
BACK AND FORTH IN FRONT OF THE MIRROR
Just as Andrewshek was walking
back and forth and back and forth in
front of the mirror for the eleventh time,
he heard a great commotion at the
kitchen door. The kitten and the dog
and the two chickens and the white goat
had come into the kitchen.
They went straight to the kitchen
table.
M
N N ; M M N
“Don’t I see poppy seed cakes?” the
white goat asked Andrewshek.
“They smell delicious!” said the kit¬
ten and the dog and the two chickens.
“Auntie Katushka made the poppy
seed cakes for a tea-party,” said Andrew¬
shek.
“Are we invited to the tea-party?”
asked the white goat.
i i V t V
“Are we invited to the tea-party?”
asked the kitten and the dog and the two
chickens.
“I think not,” said Andrewshek.
“Here comes Auntie Katushka, I will
ask her.” ✓
The kitten and the dog and the two
chickens and the white goat ran out of
the door and into the garden as fast as
f mmmm AAA 1
i « i [ ^ ^ . a ^
I M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M
i
they could go. Andrewshek took off
the best silk apron and the bright shawl
and laid them on the fine feather bed.
<£Erminka and Erminka’s mother and
Erminka’s little brother will come to our
tea-party at exactly half past three,” said
Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka.
At exactly half past three Erminka
I K
i
I i ^ ^ j «^ i l .A i i
>/
M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M
and Erminka’s mother and Erminka’s
little brother came to the tea-party.
Erminka brought her wooden dolls.
Erminka wore her new black slippers.
Erminka and Andrewshek and Er¬
minka’s little brother played together
with Erminka’s dolls around the corner
of the house, near the front gate. Er¬
minka said, “My mother says we may
s M M M M
M M M
M | M M fe1
have a tea-party for you and your Auntie
Katushka at my house to-morrow and
have gooseberry tarts.”
“Goody!” said Andrewshek. I
Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka
spread a clean white table cloth on the
table under the apple tree in the garden.
She brought out two plates of poppy
SHE SPREAD A CLEAN WHITE CLOTH ON THE TABLE
seed cakes and five cups and saucers and
five spoons and five napkins. Then she
went back into the house to get some
strawberry jam.
The white goat and the kitten and
the dog and the two chickens came and
sat down on the bench beside the table
under the apple tree in the garden.
They sat very quiet with their hands
THEY SAT VERY QUIET WITH THEIR HANDS FOLDED
\„
folded.
“If we behave nicely,” said the white
goat, “perhaps Andrewshek’s Auntie Ka-
tushka will let us join the tea-party.”
Andrewshek’s Auntie Katushka came
out on the porch with a bowl of straw¬
berry jam in her hand. She saw the
white goat and the kitten and the dog and
the two chickens sitting quiet on the
M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M
bench, with their hands folded.
“Well! well!” said Auntie Katushka.
“Some more friends have come to our
tea-party. I hope they will like poppy
seed cakes and strawberry jam, too.”
And they did.
<
* r
DATE DUE
JA2V'®
MY 1 V68
0 5’68 Jft 57C m 3170
Re 9 ■'T"
GAYLORD PRINTED IN U..S. A.
BY JEAN McDEVITT
ILLUSTRATED BY NINON
There never was a family quite
like the Apple family.
First it was Mr. Apple’s idea
that, as long as his name was
Apple, his children should have
Apple names, so there was Mac¬
intosh, Jonathan, Delicious,
Snow and, finally, just Ann
Apple.
Then it was Mrs. Apple’s idea
that their city apartment was
too crowded for seven Apples.
That was how they happened to
move to a new home in an apple
orchard. It took lots of work, in¬
deed, inside and out, for all the
Apples to make it look like a
real Apple home.
But it was the red and shiny
apples in the orchard that solved
the Apple family problem and
made it possible for them to do
the thing they wanted most.
This is a perfect book for be¬
ginning readers to read them¬
selves — a delightful story with
gay pictures on every page.
Printed in the U.S A. < A
The POPPY SEED
CAKES By
MARGERY CLARK
A3
Illustrated by Maud & Miska Petersham
• “Most highly recommended” (**) in the H. W. Wilson
Children’s Catalog as a book “whose demonstrated
usefulness in elementary school libraries is vouched
for by a group of experienced librarians and specialists
in children’s literature.”
• Recommended by the Child Study Association.
• Recommended by the American Council on Education
in its publication “Reading Ladders for Human Re¬
lations.”
.<■*' -3^. > ' ' . ' ' rj V * ft